Large-scale structures from different countries that no longer exist (14 photos)
We invite you to take a look at the large-scale and truly impressive buildings from different ones, which should have stood for centuries! But their fate was such that they did not “live” to this day. Let's find out why this happened in the continuation of the post.
Reunification Arch, Pyongyang, DPRK
It was built in 2001 and demolished in January 2024. The arch symbolized the unification of the two Koreas.
The oldest house in Hamburg, built in 1524. Colorized photo from 1898
Despite protests, the house was demolished in 1910.
Huge blast furnaces at a steel mill in Pittsburgh, 1950s
The plant was dismantled in the 1980s.
Balneological hospital in Druskininkai, Lithuania
It was demolished in 2005.
Dewey Arch, Madison Square, New York
The arch stood for only a year, from 1899 to 1900.
Watkins Tower is an unfinished structure in London's Wembley Park that was intended to become Britain's Eiffel Tower
Construction only reached this stage, and in 1907 Watkins Tower was dismantled. But according to the plan, the tower was supposed to be 28 meters higher than its Parisian competitor.
Kitaygorodskaya wall, Moscow
It was almost completely demolished in 1934.
Trinity Episcopal Church, Washington. Photo from 1862
It was demolished in 1936. The Capitol under construction can be seen in the background.
Women's Hospital and Maternity Hospital in Chicago
The building by famed architect Bertrand Goldberg was demolished in 2014.
Pearl Bank residential building in Singapore, built in 1976
At the time of construction, it was one of the tallest buildings in the country. It was demolished in 2020.
New York World Building, built in 1889
The height of one of the first skyscrapers in the city was 106 meters. It was demolished in 1955 for the construction of a new exit from the Brooklyn Bridge.
Church of Saint Jacques, Abbeville, France
It was built in 1868 and demolished in 2013.
Surreal painting of the Ohio Building being launched into the water, 1916
It was erected specifically for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition, held in San Francisco to celebrate the completion of the Panama Canal. After the end of the exhibition, the building was transported by water to the city of San Mateo, where it, having been a country club, a bar and an aircraft parts workshop, burned down in 1956.
The Jewel Tower was the main structure at the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
The height of the tower is 133 meters. It was decorated with 100 thousand cut glass and was illuminated at night by 50 spotlights. It was demolished immediately after the end of the exhibition that year.